Type | Working Paper |
Title | Access to Water Improves Boys’ Education, not Girls’: Evidence from Tanzania and Uganda |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Austin_Hart/publication/308676268_Access_to_Water_Improves_Boys'_Education_not_Girls'_Evidence_from_Tanzania_and_Uganda/links/57ea9b5608ae5d93a4815354.pdf |
Abstract | Does gaining a more proximate water source improve a child’s attendance in school and consequent educational attainment? Policymakers and IGOs alike argue that time savings from improved water access create educational opportunities children, especially girls. While this logic motivates development projects around the world, these claims have not been tested rigorously. Moreover, there are reasons to believe that pro-son bias leads households to redistribute time saved from improved water access unequally, allowing boys to attend school and not girls. We test these competing arguments by evaluating the effect of changes in proximity to water on children’s educational outcomes in Uganda and the Kagera region of Tanzania. Contrary to the conventional narrative, we find that water access improves educational attainment only among boys. Consistent with the argument that pro-son bias motivates this sex-based difference in the effect of water access, we find that the educational gains are greatest where girls and boys share water-harvesting duties. |
» | Uganda - National Panel Survey 2011-2012 |